Devils will give Jagr a look

NEWARK, N.J. — The Devils replaced their best player, with one of the NHL's greatest of all time.

The Associated Press

NEWARK, N.J. — The Devils replaced their best player, with one of the NHL's greatest of all time.

Less than two weeks after the stunning defection of Ilya Kovalchuk back to Russia, the Devils signed two-time Stanley Cup winner and former NHL MVP Jaromir Jagr to a one-year, $2 million contract on Tuesday.

There is no doubt that the 41-year-old Jagr is in the twilight of his career, and he certainly will never fill the void left by Kovalchuk, who decided to retire from the NHL at 30 so he can play in his native Russia.

For now, though, Jagr gives general manager Lou Lamoriello and the Devils a proven scorer who works hard up front and can play on the power play.

"I watched him play the last couple of years and I have never seen someone work so hard," Lamoriello said Tuesday. "We know where he is in his career. He brings something. Everyone who has played with him the last couple of years and also the coaches have been complimentary toward everything he has done. There is no question he can help us on the power play.

"He is a well-conditioned athlete and we are happy with what he is going to bring."

Jagr split last season with the Dallas Stars and Boston Bruins, scoring a combined 16 goals and 19 assists in 45 games. The NHL's active leading scorer added 10 assists in helping the Bruins reach the Stanley Cup final, but he did not score a postseason goal. He signed with Dallas last summer, and started the year playing in Europe due to the NHL lockout.

The 16 regular-season goals would have led the Devils last season and his 35 points would have been one behind team leader Patrik Elias.

"He is still a top-six forward," Lamoriello said.

Kovalchuk, who walked away from $77 million left on a contract that he signed in 2010, had 11 goals and 20 assists in a season limited to 37 games mostly by a shoulder injury.

Jagr had told his agent, Petr Svoboda, a former NHL defenseman, that he wanted to stay in the Eastern Conference.

"There was only one thing on my mind, I wanted to stay in the NHL," Jagr said, adding Russia's KHL was not an option.

Jagr has 681 goals and 1,007 assists in 1,391 career regular-season games with Pittsburgh, Washington, the Rangers, Philadelphia, Dallas and Boston. He won Stanley Cups with Pittsburgh in 1990-91 and 1991-92 as well as the league MVP in 1998-99.

Jagr will wear his famous No. 68 with the Devils. In the Lamoriello era, only three non-goaltenders have ever worn jersey numbers higher than No. 34 in their history — Doug Gilmour (93), Alexander Mogilny (89) and Stephane Richer (44).